A rambling monologue of one man's views on society, politics, business, environment, consumerism etc. If you want to know which trash can to put this in, "dissident American independent with liberal and tree hugger tendencies" will do.

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Teens, an artificial grouping if you use it to categorize by maturity, are reputed to have achieved nearly instant trend propagation. That is not news and the four commentaries don't declare it to be. The speed of propagation is generally attributed to whatever speed the available media supports...I agree. But no one addresses the question of why, of what might make this pattern so universal.

This is the sort of situation that invites a dork like me to trot out my theory. It is much simpler than one might expect from the blurry junk pile of diverging trends that youth, in the memory of extant books and commenters, have picked up and soon enough tossed aside where cultural historians come along to force them into palateable rationales: The stronger that school-of-fish-turning-on-a-dime behavior, the less secure the creatures that are exhibiting it.

Herd behavior is an adaptation to the sense of vulnerability.

The confidence for genuine individuality generally comes to us much later than the urge to stake out an identity. Being human is not easy. Each style-as-badge a person adopts makes sense to them in the context of the moment of adoption. Being somebody recognizable but not exposed for being too different is a compelling consideration at a certain point in your life.